Luol Deng says his wrist is “fine” (but it probably isn’t)

Luol Deng fulfilled his role as ambassador for basketball in Great Britain, which won its first Olympic game since 1948 in its final attempt with a 90-58 victory over China on Monday.

Then, he offered good news for Bulls fans, strongly implying he will either forgo surgery on the torn ligament in his left wrist altogether or postpone it until after the 2012-13 season.

Really, Lu? No surgery?

Said Deng: “Did I look like I needed (surgery)? I’m fine right now. I feel great. There are a lot of things I want to improve in my game that I want to focus on. I want to be a better player than I was last year. I have time to make decisions and be healthy by the time we start (training camp).”

It is my belief that the decline in Deng’s shooting ability is directly linked to his wrist injury. Yes, I know it’s not his shooting wrist, but as this instructional Web site points out: “the non-shooting hand should be used to help guide (a player’s) shots (and) adds balance to the shooting motion.”

Now, there are only eight weeks until the Bulls’ training camp begins, and surgery would likely sideline Deng for 2-4 months. I get that. Would Lu’s absence hurt the team? Sure. But no more than the absence of Derrick Rose…not to mention the valued bench contributors (C.J. Watson, Kyle Korver, Omer Asik, Ronnie Brewer) that management let walk or traded away.

At the time, Deng said: “Much as I wanted to please Chicago and Chicago Bulls fans, I just hope they understand if I don’t play in these Olympics, it will haunt me for the rest of my life. Giving something back is something that comes from my family.”

Now Deng is claiming his wrist is fine. I call shenanigans.

Either Deng’s pride is making him avoid or forgo surgery, or the team is pressuring him to be available for the start of the season as a form of punishment for participating in the Olympics against their wishes. Or maybe it’s a little of Column A and a little of Column B.

Anybody who has followed Deng’s career only to watch his shooting ability drop off so severely will tell you his wrist is not doing well and he needs to address it.

Look: The Bulls aren’t going anywhere without Rose. The bench has been rebuilt and it’s going to take time to get everybody on the same page. There is no sense in making Deng start the season. None.

This guy can’t get any respect! When he was hurt, he gets ripped for being soft. Then everyone wants him traded after Del Negro’s ‘stand in the corner and wait for a kick out’ offense. He had a couple of really good seasons, and finally gets some recognition (and an Allstar selection)… Only to be ridiculed for NOT missing some of the season. I think Deng will an important piece for next season. Mainly his leadership more than playmaking.

I have respect for Deng, but I’m looking at this objectively. After Rose tore his ACL, that should’ve been the sign for CHI to get some much needed offensive weapons. Is Deng really an offensive weapon? He doesn’t have a deadly jump-shot, 3-point shot or inside game. He does all of it solidly, but he’s not the type of player you game-plan for on the offensive end.

CHI needs to get value out of Deng while it’s high, or else Rose will have to shoulder the load alllll over again. God forbid he suffers another major injury.

What kind of real value can you get for Deng with a bum wrist? I like the idea of selling Lu high, but I can’t see another team giving us the type of player you are expecting. His contract is close to Andre Iguodala, Danny Granger, and LaMarcus Aldridge level players. I know I wouldn’t give up any of those names for Deng. I guess a player like Bogut would be close salary-wise, but would Bulls management really want him?

Who is the f-ing idiot that wrote this? Are you seriously comparing Deng’s Olympic numbers to his NBA stats? The GB team that he is on is terrible and probably wouldn’t make it to the final four in march madness. He is by far the best player on GB aqnd was getting swormed in every game. Deng is going to be fine and he is our starter at least until his contract runs out after next season; probably even after for a reduced contract. deal with it and stop comparing him to other players when you don’t know schmitt about basketball

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[...] Last season, Deng had the lowest field goal percentage of his career (41.2), and his splits show how his percentages dropped after he suffered the injury in January. And he shot 31 percent during the Olympics. [...]